The Philosopher's Pupil Explained

The Philosopher's Pupil
Author:Iris Murdoch
Cover Artist:Cathie Felstead[1]
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Publisher:Chatto & Windus
Release Date:1983
Media Type:Print
Pages:576
Isbn:0-7011-2682-5

The Philosopher's Pupil is a 1983 novel by the British writer and philosopher Iris Murdoch. It is set in a small English spa town called Ennistone.

Main characters

Plot

George McCaffrey cannot understand why his long-ago philosophy professor told him to pick another field of study. But that professor, John Robert Rozanov, is returning to Ennistone where George lives, giving George the chance to ask him and finally understand. John Robert, the only famous person to have originated from Ennistone, will have none of it, simply telling George "you weren't good enough" and bringing the conversation to a close as quickly as he can, given George's desperate attempts to continue. John Robert has returned to Ennistone for an entirely different purpose, indeed one that disincentivizes further effort at socially graceful tolerance of George's neuroses. George is simultaneously a focus of town suspicion, as he was recently involved in a mysterious car crash that may have been an attempt to kill his wife, Stella.

As a part of his purpose, John Robert wishes to arrange the future of his granddaughter Hattie Meynell, without her knowledge, by encouraging Tom McCaffrey, George's younger step brother, to woo Hattie, and then to marry her. But during their first meeting, when Tom clumsily lets on that his meeting request was not entirely the result of his own initiative and interest in Hattie, she reacts with hurt and anger. Through a sequence of plot twists, Tom finds himself trapped deep beneath the spa for which Ennistone is famous. As in many Murdoch novels, this physical struggle for survival parallels the characters' struggle to resolve their complex, interwoven emotional issues.

Further reading

"A Guide to Iris Murdoch's The Philosopher's Pupil" (2003).

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Fletcher, John. Garland Publishing. 0824089103. Cheryl Browning Bove. Iris Murdoch: a descriptive primary and annotated secondary bibliography. New York. 1994. 73.